Exploring othering and perceived harmful drinking contexts among risky drinkers: An arts‐based focus group study
Melissa Oldham, Jiexi Yang, Tosan Okpako, Dimitra Kale, James Morris, Claire Garnett, Sara Wallhed Finn, Felix Naughton, Jamie Brown

TL;DR
This study explores how risky drinkers judge harmful drinking contexts and use arts-based methods to understand how they differentiate themselves from others.
Contribution
The study introduces arts-based focus groups to explore how risky drinkers construct othering narratives around harmful drinking contexts.
Findings
Participants tended to draw drinking contexts different from their own, indicating a sense of control over their drinking.
Four subthemes (mental, physical, social, and societal harms) were identified as associated with harmful drinking contexts.
Seven features (like drinking alone or at home) were highlighted as indicators of harmful drinking.
Abstract
To explore whether people ‘other’ when making judgements about ‘harmful’ drinking and the drinking contexts (e.g., pub with friends) and features of drinking contexts (e.g., location, company) perceived as being indicative of harmful drinking. Focus group design with arts‐based methods. Risky drinkers (AUDIT‐C ≥ 5; n = 20) in four focus groups, drew and discussed contexts and features of contexts they thought indicated harmful drinking. Reflexive thematic analysis was conducted alongside content analysis of drawings informed by themes and prior research. There are three deductive themes. The first theme semblance of control referred to people's tendency to differentiate their own drinking practices as controlled and safe in relation to the out‐of‐control behaviours of a harmful drinker. This was seen in the content analysis of drawings where participants tended to draw drinking…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSubstance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · Wine Industry and Tourism · Alcohol Consumption and Health Effects
